Sublime
An inspiration engine for ideas
They always talk about a model scoring 99.7% on a test. Well, how about a joke test? I confidently presume the answer is currently no, and I think it stays no for a long time, even at their most capable. This isn’t a moralistic “go humans” judgment; it’s the technical reality. They operate on a probability distribution of data. I love the idea that... See more
Quit Optimizing for Algorithms. Make Something Weird.
You should also ask yourself why it is that so many innovations on Earth come not from anarchic wastelands but from cities where an engineer’s main hardship is eight-dollar espressos.
Zach Weinersmith • A City on Mars: Can we settle space, should we settle space, and have we really thought this through?
A chat with Glen Baxter, the “Yorkshire surrealist” who’s spent decades drawing cowboys in strange scenarios
Olivia Hingleyitsnicethat.com
Not what massaging the data means.
(I have been randomly animating scientific diagrams with Pika) https://t.co/dXrj6bx5ZS
Ethan Mollickx.comSource: The A.V. Club
Watch The Avengers re-assemble to record The Avengers in Lakota
The web hasn’t had its artisanal moment. Right now, giant, ad-based networks created by six men that everyone begrudgingly uses with diminishing emotional returns, control the vast majority of the web.
Sublime • Notes on Scale + Quality
Back in May, Ted Gioia wrote about the wave of corporations and celebrities joining Substack. Longtime internet readers will note the clear echo of 2000s blog triumphalism and/or 2010s Twitter energy, which is to say: enjoy it while it lasts.
I think it’s a notable that Ted’s post, though it’s titled Substack Has Changed in the Last 30 Days,... See more
I think it’s a notable that Ted’s post, though it’s titled Substack Has Changed in the Last 30 Days,... See more